
Alexia Putellas has left FC Barcelona to sign with London City, a high-profile coup for owner Michele Kang and the Women's Super League. The two-time Ballon d'Or winner arrives on a multi-year deal that prioritises influence and growth as much as silverware, signaling the WSL's growing pull for elite talent and a bold ambition to reshape the club landscape.
Putellas signs for London City — what happened
Alexia Putellas has officially joined London City ahead of the upcoming Women’s Super League season, departing Barcelona after a trophy-laden 14-year career. The move pairs one of the game's most decorated midfielders with an ambitious independent club owned by Michele Kang and integrated into the Kynisca multi-club group.

Contract basics and financial context
Financial terms indicate a three-year initial deal with a base salary below €1 million per year, a clear uplift from the roughly €750,000 she earned at Barcelona. The structure appears designed to balance competitive compensation with Putellas’ broader priorities: on-field leadership and an expanded role in growing the women’s game.
Why Putellas chose London City
Putellas’ decision reflects more than money. At 32, she has already won virtually every major club honour — including multiple Champions League titles and two Ballon d'Or awards — and now seems focused on legacy-building. London City offers a chance to be central to an ambitious project rather than one of many stars at an established European powerhouse.
WSL appeal over the NWSL
The WSL’s competitive depth, media exposure and proximity to Spain likely weighed heavily. The league’s week-in, week-out quality and the logistical convenience of being closer to Barcelona are practical advantages. For elite players seeking both sporting challenge and a platform to influence the game, the WSL continues to demonstrate strong pull.
On-field fit and immediate impact
Putellas brings elite technical control, vision and set-piece threat to a midfield that previously lacked a singular game-structuring presence. Expect her to operate as a central orchestrator — dictating tempo, linking play between defence and attack, and providing leadership in tight matches where experience matters most.
Role expectations
Tactically, Putellas is likely to be deployed as a free number 8/10 hybrid: tasked with progressing play, arriving late into the box, and assuming responsibility for dead-ball situations. Her presence will change how opponents defend London City, freeing teammates and creating more space for wide attackers.
Club context: Hayes Lane, recruitment and ambition
London City finished mid-table in their first WSL season and play at Hayes Lane, a compact ground seating just over 6,000. The club has been active in the transfer window beyond Putellas: England goalkeeper Mary Earps, Germany’s Nicole Anyomi and fullback Janni Thomsen have been added to elevate standards across the squad.
Infrastructure and visibility challenges
Hayes Lane’s size and last season’s attendance figures underline a practical constraint: building matchday momentum will be as important as results. Putellas’ arrival is a strategic attempt to accelerate growth in fans, media profile and sponsorship — areas where investment can produce outsized returns in the women’s game.
Michele Kang’s multi-club strategy and regulatory headwinds
Kang’s Kynisca group aims to accelerate development through shared resources across clubs. That model brings clear advantages in scouting, coaching and commercial reach. But it exists amid regulatory scrutiny: UEFA has moved to limit participation of clubs tied to the same multi-club ownership in the women’s Champions League, an institutional guardrail that will shape how ambitious groups operate at the top level.
Reputational risks and rewards
Choosing London City carries a reputational gamble for Putellas. She must balance the desire to keep winning with the perception that joining a nascent project could reduce immediate Champions League exposure. Equally, the move could position her as a transformative figure — someone who leverages elite standing to build sustainable success at a club with big backing.
What this means for the women's game
Putellas moving to the WSL underscores the league’s status as a premier destination for global stars. It highlights a broader trend: elite players are increasingly weighing project potential, platform and influence alongside immediate silverware. The transfer also amplifies a competitive market for talent where investment and vision matter as much as tradition.
Immediate calendar and what's next
Putellas will join pre-season with London City ahead of their second WSL campaign, with her competitive debut expected early in the season. On the club side, the immediate priorities are integrating new arrivals, strengthening attendances at Hayes Lane, and translating investment into consistent performances that close the gap on England’s current top sides.
Conclusion — a calculated gamble
This signing is both a statement and a strategic calculation. For Putellas, it is an opportunity to broaden her influence off the pitch while still competing at a high level.
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For London City and Kang, it is a rapid escalation of ambition. If the club can marry investment with smart infrastructure and coaching, Putellas' arrival could accelerate a rise — but the next 12–36 months will reveal whether that ambition translates into silverware and sustained growth.
Theathleticuk



